Health Sciences In The Media Type 2 diabetics struggle to get Ozempic as others use it for weight loss Feb. 1, 2023 A medication used to treat Type 2 diabetes has been in short supply for months because people who do not have diabetes are using the drug to take advantage of its weight-loss side effect. KOLD/KMSB-TV (Tucson, AZ) Key to healthier employees might be quieter or louder office space: study Feb. 1, 2023 A recent study conducted by scientists at the Universities of Arizona and Kansas suggest that working at a busy coffee shop may be healthier than doing so in a quiet office. ANI (India) What is Valley fever? Fungal infection from the Southwest may spread with climate change. Feb. 1, 2023 Studies show variable weather caused by climate change could spread Valley fever to other parts of the country. USA Today Idaho murderer was chasing a 'thrill kill', says forensic expert Jan. 31, 2023 The murder of four University of Idaho students in the early hours of November 13, 2022, was likely a "thrill kill" according to a leading forensic psychiatrist. Newsweek Valley fever, historically found only in the Southwest, is spreading. It can have devastating consequences. Jan. 31, 2023 Scientists have been trying to develop a vaccine for Valley fever since 1960. In recent years, researchers at the in the College of Medicine – Tucson have developed a vaccine that’s highly effective in dogs. NBC News Plants Grow Here. Podcast – The chemical age: pesticides and other chemical hazards Jan. 29, 2023 Frank A. von Hippel, PhD, professor in the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health and lead of the UArizona Health Sciences One Health Research Initiative, discusses One Health and whether we should be concerned with the modern use of pesticides and other types of chemicals. Spotify Virology is part of the golden age of health : Don’t dismantle it Jan. 29, 2023 Felicia Goodrum, PhD, professor in the Department of Immunobiology in the College of Medicine – Tucson, and James Alwine, PhD, visiting professor in the Department of Immunobiology, co-authored an opinion piece in opposition to proposals before the National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity. The Hill Does cannabis affect how we dream? Jan. 27, 2023 Studies have suggested that cannabis can suppress REM sleep and that those findings may explain why many cannabis users report that they dream very little or not at all. Leafie When is it OK to make germs worse in a lab? It's a more relevant question than ever Jan. 27, 2023 Felicia Goodrum, PhD, professor of immunobiology in the College of Medicine – Tucson, co-authored a commentary signed by over 150 virologists that says all the evidence to date indicates that the coronavirus pandemic started naturally, and it wasn't the result of some kind of lab accident or malicious attack. NPR Secret Service releases study that tracks five years of mass attacks Jan. 26, 2023 The U.S. Secret Service released a threat assessment report tracking multiple years of mass attacks. The report found half of the attackers retaliated for perceived wrongs, and over half of the attackers experienced mental health symptoms prior to or at the time of their attacks, including depression, psychotic symptoms and suicidal thoughts. WTVT-TV (Tampa, FL) Pagination « First First page ‹ Previous Previous page … 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 … Next › Next page Last » Last page
Type 2 diabetics struggle to get Ozempic as others use it for weight loss Feb. 1, 2023 A medication used to treat Type 2 diabetes has been in short supply for months because people who do not have diabetes are using the drug to take advantage of its weight-loss side effect. KOLD/KMSB-TV (Tucson, AZ)
Key to healthier employees might be quieter or louder office space: study Feb. 1, 2023 A recent study conducted by scientists at the Universities of Arizona and Kansas suggest that working at a busy coffee shop may be healthier than doing so in a quiet office. ANI (India)
What is Valley fever? Fungal infection from the Southwest may spread with climate change. Feb. 1, 2023 Studies show variable weather caused by climate change could spread Valley fever to other parts of the country. USA Today
Idaho murderer was chasing a 'thrill kill', says forensic expert Jan. 31, 2023 The murder of four University of Idaho students in the early hours of November 13, 2022, was likely a "thrill kill" according to a leading forensic psychiatrist. Newsweek
Valley fever, historically found only in the Southwest, is spreading. It can have devastating consequences. Jan. 31, 2023 Scientists have been trying to develop a vaccine for Valley fever since 1960. In recent years, researchers at the in the College of Medicine – Tucson have developed a vaccine that’s highly effective in dogs. NBC News
Plants Grow Here. Podcast – The chemical age: pesticides and other chemical hazards Jan. 29, 2023 Frank A. von Hippel, PhD, professor in the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health and lead of the UArizona Health Sciences One Health Research Initiative, discusses One Health and whether we should be concerned with the modern use of pesticides and other types of chemicals. Spotify
Virology is part of the golden age of health : Don’t dismantle it Jan. 29, 2023 Felicia Goodrum, PhD, professor in the Department of Immunobiology in the College of Medicine – Tucson, and James Alwine, PhD, visiting professor in the Department of Immunobiology, co-authored an opinion piece in opposition to proposals before the National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity. The Hill
Does cannabis affect how we dream? Jan. 27, 2023 Studies have suggested that cannabis can suppress REM sleep and that those findings may explain why many cannabis users report that they dream very little or not at all. Leafie
When is it OK to make germs worse in a lab? It's a more relevant question than ever Jan. 27, 2023 Felicia Goodrum, PhD, professor of immunobiology in the College of Medicine – Tucson, co-authored a commentary signed by over 150 virologists that says all the evidence to date indicates that the coronavirus pandemic started naturally, and it wasn't the result of some kind of lab accident or malicious attack. NPR
Secret Service releases study that tracks five years of mass attacks Jan. 26, 2023 The U.S. Secret Service released a threat assessment report tracking multiple years of mass attacks. The report found half of the attackers retaliated for perceived wrongs, and over half of the attackers experienced mental health symptoms prior to or at the time of their attacks, including depression, psychotic symptoms and suicidal thoughts. WTVT-TV (Tampa, FL)